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  • station will feature a video of Kirk Douglas and Helen Hayes, reading from letters which rs. Johnson and LBJ exchanged White House Telephone Tapes Project Continues The latest release of tape record­ ings of White House telephone con­ versations during
  • of Staff interviews with the flag duty officers, and phone and meeting logs at the White House as well as tapes of telephone conversa­ tions. What struck me as I recounted the situation on August 4 was LBJ's skeptical mood and attitude. At that time more
  • to writing," (histo­ rian) Robert A. Divine noted in a 1985 article on the LBJ Library. "Johnson preferred to deal with issues orally, either in face-to-face discussion or by telephone." One result, wrote Divine, is that the LBJ Library's extensive holdings
  • Issue Number LXIV December 15, 1996 President Johnson's Telephone Conversations Opened (Pages 2-4) Tapes Stir Scholars' and Media Interest by Regina Greenwell Senior Archivist On October 11, the Johnson Library opened for research approximately
  • Issue Number LXVI August 15, 1997 ofL/31 Library Opens More LBJ Telephone Tapes The library opened for research the fifth increment of President Johnson's White House telephone conversations. This group of 66 tapes covers the period July
  • in December A few of the topics he covered: Reminiscence of LBJ .. We had in our family for 40 years a remarkable woman by the name of Emily Wilson One day in the mid-60's, I got home from the office and said t Emily, ·'Hold off the telephone calls, Jneed
  • Among Issue umber LXXlll, October, 2000 Three Members of the "Johnson Gang" And the Writer Who Immortalized Them See Page Two White House Telephone Tapes and the "Johnson Gang" The recordings of President Johnson's telephone conversations have
  • on what Harry has created. He'll still be a Dutch uncle forus his­ torians, and a wise man for all of Texa. and all of America. ' For the occa. i n, Middleton and the Library ·taff collaborated in creat­ ing a comic takeoff on the telephone tapes. LBJ's
  • , are historians beginn.ing to find their sea legs on Kennedy On the telephone tapes: I live in Washington, and talk to a lot of scholars and journal­ ists. [When the LBJ telephone tapes were releasecll, I cannot tell you the number of times I heard from people
  • the papers presented at the symposium. White House Telephone Tapes Released By Regina Greenwell. Senior Archivist On June 8, 2001, the Johnson Library released the latest batch of recordings and transcripts of President Jolrnson 's telephone conversations
  • by Charles Bogel 6 Latest Release of LBJ Telephone Recordings By Robi,r/ Hicks. Communications Director The LBJ Library released the latest batch of President Johnson's telephone recordings on April 30. It includes rnn­ versations from April through July
  • telephone tapes of Johnson. Yarrington sa the tapes show the ·'real LBJ," as the president "I ived on the telephone.'' Popular exhibits that will remain at the library include the nearly lifesize version of the Oval Office as it looked during John ·on 's
  • Bobbitt: Failures in the field of intelligence often lead to later suc­ cesses, but the reverse is also true. Success can lead to com­ placency. LBJ's Telephone Tapes to Be Transcribed The Miller Center at the University of Virginia has undertaken
  • objects selected from the West Wmg rooms - uch as th . Augustus Saint-Gaudens bronze portrait of Lincoln, the President's Cabinet Chair, and the telephone from the Little ounge - add realism t the exhibit. The photograph hove hows Library vi itor studying
  • , while pulling one supporting clipping and memo after another out of his pocket."' It was, Humphrey said, ·'an almost hypnotic experience. l came out of that session covered with blood, sweat, tears, spit, and spurs." White House Telephone Tape Mystery
  • , and I went in to see him. He was on the phone all by himself, with a list of telephone numbers, and I heard him talking to a man who turned out to be the County Chairman of Kansas City. He was coming up to the third term election in I 940 and I remember
  • called to confer with the Joint Chiefs and the NSC. In addition to group meetings, Johnson frequently hud­ dled with individual advisers, and, as one aide put it, he "had those damned telephones of his going all the lime:· These consultations included
  • as the continu­ ing release of the LBJ White House telephone recordings. ln September, Lhe Archives made available the recordings from September-October 1964, or 34 hours of presiclenti"'I telephone conversations. About 40 per cent of the collection has now been
  • . and Development or Industry in Central America." Deputy Di.rector Tina Houston pre­ sented M . Warnock with a signed copy of LBJ: The White House Years, by for­ mer Library Director Harry Middleton, and a sample CD of President Johnson ·s telephone tape
  • game is ov r.'' W said, "Oh, no, r. President. We can still g t it." But he knew precisely when the tide had turned, though h . hadn't been on Capitol Hill. He just knew it in tinctively. Hugh SidneJ LBJ'· lov of the telephone was legendary. lt was rum
  • in Washington. We also invited Ernest Goldstein and his wife, Peggy, friends of the Johnsons. Ernie later would leave the UT faculty and become a special assistant to the President in Washington. It was the telephone call from Horace Busby at the LBJ Ranch after
  • telephone tapes, as he said in his opening: 9 tht" J,1hn-.on 11 .. J ,an t1un. \'
  • cherished goal: to com­ plete the reforms begun 111 ranklin Roosevelt's ew Deal. Califano confirmed the famous story that LBJ ordered a telephone in­ stalled in alifano's office bathroom, so he would never to be out of touch with the Oval Office. The darkest
  • in the Johnson Administration in every capacity, as cabinet officers, White House assistants, telephone operators, secretaries and Secret Ser­ vice agents, plumbers and calligra­ phers-l ,000 in all-gathered at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington on April 6
  • House telephone tapes, great LBJ memorabilia, and campaign buttons from past elections. Texas Electric Cooperatives released their new cookbook, 60 Years of Home Cooking, when the exhibit opened. Not only does it contain great recipes
  • DO Photos by Charles Bogel ll LBJ Library Releases Telephone Conversation Recordings by Anne Wheeler, Communications Director Listen a President Lyndon John­ son talks about using the "Hot Line' for the rst time during the Six Day War, discusses
  • and with a broad-minded manner, so as c say in Russia, I don't know how y u say m Texas, was as broad as Texas ... He gave me his pri­ vate telephone,-to his bedroom ... he said 'Look here ... peo­ ple go through the1-.cold connections . . . they' re bureaucrats
  • was to read some of his poetry At fiN. Lowell accepted this invitation. but on May 30. 1965. he sent President Johnson a letter which he had also released to the Ne\\' l'!,rf..7imt•~- In his letter. Lowell saiu "When I was telephoned last wed.. and askcd 10
  • with a telephone as you probably know. He began to talk to me about the Vietnam war ... He just spent an hour and a ha!f preaching to the converted because while 1disagreed in some ways [about how] the war was being conducted, I did feel that basically it had
  • .'ifom,lo P~lf Border 9 re,rt~"· past and planned ai'li\11ties. ,tbrarJ Library Opens More LBJ Tapes The Library opcn1.:d anntb ·r incrcmcnl of lapc:-; of Pn.:sidi:01 John. on':. telephone convc.:r:salions oovering 1hc tno111hsof April, May am.IJun
  • Membership) Lifetime Membership Corporate Membership Zip City 2.000 $5,000 annunally Telephone (Please call 478- 7829 ror Corpo1·ate Membci-ship information) Enclos d is my check. Please 1110/..e checks parnh/1! ro Tht: Friends or LBJ Library Coming
  • that actually furnished the room during the Johnson years, including the President's desk, rocking
  • Roared;" and "U.S.A.: the 188 s." • The Archives- Researc The Johnson presidential papers include interagency and staff memoranda and reports, cabinet studies, notes on telephone calls and meetings task force repom, daily diaries, and correspondence
  • puzzle. Scraps of information from an appointment book, guarded phrases in brief memos to aides, and records of telephone calls became precious clues in the search for information. The oral histori~ of cabinet members on file in the LBJ Librar were
  • in which he reveals his personal views or explains why he acted as he did on key issues. Johnson preferred to deal with is ues orally, either in face-to-face discussion or by telephone. White House logs itemize the phone calls on a daily basis
  • Membership (please print) $50 per person annually ($100 per couple) $2,000 $5,000 annually (Please call 478-7829 for Corporate Membership information) D Enclosed is my check. City Zip Telephone Please make checks payable to The Friends of The LBJ
  • ,000annually Telephone (Please call 478-7829 for Corporate Membership information) Enclosed is my check. Please make checks payable to The Friends of LBJ Library Coming Events: October 7 An Evening With Charlie Wilson. 6:00 p.m .. A Friends event
  • ians and then transcribed on pap r) add much needed detail. for the telephone has eliminated much of the m mo­ writing done by former Presidents. "What is open for investigation'?" is a timely question. Naturally, materials which have not ye been
  • dern ca e of communication by telephone and personal conver­ sation. A econd prize may be awarded for the definitive study of the American role in Vietnam. The National Security Files, which were kept in the Situation Room at the White House, fulfilled
  • things t learn is not to be an en­ abler. In other words, not ov r up, not make the excuses, not make the telephone alls as to why so-and-so won't be in to school or in to work because of a cold or a toothache or some other reason, but let the honest